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First published online December 17, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.132795 Plant Physiology 149:981-993 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Expansion and Diversification of the Populus R2R3-MYB Family of Transcription Factors1,[W],[OA]Department of Cell and Systems Biology and Centre for the Analysis of Genome Evolution and Function, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3B2
The R2R3-MYB proteins comprise one of the largest families of transcription factors in plants. R2R3-MYB family members regulate plant-specific processes, such as the elaboration of specialized cell types, including xylem, guard cells, trichomes, and root hairs, and the biosynthesis of specialized branches of metabolism, including phenylpropanoid biosynthesis. As such, R2R3-MYB family members are hypothesized to contribute to the emergence of evolutionary innovations that have arisen in specific plant lineages. As a first step in determining the role played by R2R3-MYB family members in the emergence of lineage-specific innovations in the genus Populus, the entire Populus trichocarpa R2R3-MYB family was characterized. The Populus R2R3-MYB complement is much larger than that found in other angiosperms with fully sequenced genomes. Phylogenetic analyses, together with chromosome placement, showed that the expansion of the Populus R2R3-MYB family was not only attributable to whole genome duplication but also involved selective expansion of specific R2R3-MYB clades. Expansion of the Populus R2R3-MYB family prominently involved members with expression patterns that suggested a role in specific components of Populus life history, including wood formation and reproductive development. An expandable compendium of microarray-based expression data (PopGenExpress) and associated Web-based tools were developed to better enable within- and between-species comparisons of Populus R2R3-MYB gene expression. This resource, which includes intuitive graphic visualization of gene expression data across multiple tissues, organs, and treatments, is freely available to, and expandable by, scientists wishing to better understand the genome biology of Populus, an ecologically dominant and economically important forest tree genus.
Plant growth and development are regulated by the coordinated expression of tens of thousands of genes. This is achieved through the actions of transcription factors, proteins that show sequence-specific DNA binding that activate or repress transcription in response to endogenous and exogenous stimuli (Riechmann et al., 2000
The MYB gene family is at least one billion years old and is represented in genomes in all major eukaryotic lineages (Lipsick, 1996
All known animal MYB DBDs consist of three tandem repeats of the MYB motif (designated R1, R2, and R3) and are referred to as 3R-MYB proteins (Rosinski and Atchley, 1998
This expansion of the R2R3-MYB family in plants supports the observation that many R2R3-MYB transcription factors play roles in plant-specific processes. For example, the elaboration of specific epidermal cell types, including trichomes (Oppenheimer et al., 1991
Given the multiplicity of plant-specific processes controlled by R2R3-MYB transcription factors, it has been postulated that the elaboration of the R2R3-MYB family may account for some of the evolutionary innovations that contribute to plant diversity (Riechmann et al., 2000
Molecular evidence suggests that P. trichocarpa and Arabidopsis shared their last common ancestor some 100 to 120 million years ago (Tuskan et al., 2006
The Populus R2R3-MYB Family Is Larger Than That of Other Sequenced Dicotyledonous Angiosperms
The Populus R2R3-MYB family was compared with the corresponding families from the woody perennial Vitis vinifera, which is a sister taxon to Populus in Eurosids I, and the more distantly related Arabidopsis, which is a member of Eurosids II. The predicted R2 and R3 MYB repeats of the MYB DBD are highly conserved across plant lineages (Jin and Martin, 1999
The P. trichocarpa genome encodes many more R2R3-MYB family members (192) than either Arabidopsis (126; Stracke et al., 2001
Evidence of the salicoid-specific whole genome duplication event in the Populus lineage (approximately 65 million years ago) is present throughout the P. trichocarpa genome (Tuskan et al., 2006
Tandem gene duplication has also played an important role in the elaboration of the R2R3-MYB gene family. More than 35% (68 of 192) of the R2R3-MYB-encoding genes in the P. trichocarpa genome are present as tandem repeats, where the gene duplications were directly adjacent to each other on a given LG, with no intervening annotated gene. Tandem repeats most commonly include duplicate or triplicate R2R3-MYB-encoding genes, but there is one instance of four tandem repeats (LG_XI) and one of six repeats (LG_II).
While the number of R2R3-MYB-encoding genes has expanded in Populus, the number of 3R-MYB genes has not. That is, Arabidopsis (Stracke et al., 2001 Phylogenetic analysis of the predicted R2R3-MYB protein sequences revealed that there was not equal representation of Populus, Vitis, and Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB proteins within given clades (Fig. 2; Supplemental Fig. S1). For example, phylogeny subgroup C25, which includes only one Arabidopsis MYB protein and two Vitis MYB proteins, includes seven Populus R2R3-MYB proteins. By contrast, the C13 subgroup includes six Arabidopsis and two Vitis MYB proteins but not one predicted Populus MYB protein. In other cases, such as subgroup C22, there are fewer Populus MYB proteins than expected, given the whole genome duplication event (five Arabidopsis, three P. trichocarpa, three V. vinifera). These findings lend support to the model of gene loss in the Populus lineage or gene duplication in the Arabidopsis lineage following divergence from the last common ancestor. Remarkably, several clades do not include any Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB proteins but only members from Populus and Vitis (Fig. 2). This suggests that the genes in these clades may have specialized roles that were either lost in Arabidopsis or acquired in the Populus and Vitis lineages after divergence from the last common ancestor with Arabidopsis. It remains to be determined whether the absence of Arabidopsis genes in these clades extends to other members of Eurosids II or whether it is something particular to the Arabidopsis genome.
Affymetrix Poplar Genome Arrays were used to assess the transcript abundance of 180 R2R3-MYB-encoding genes (Supplemental Table S1). There were no probe sets on the array corresponding to the remaining R2R3-MYB-encoding transcripts. Transcript abundance for the R2R3-MYB-encoding genes was assessed in biological triplicate RNA samples extracted from seedlings grown under different light regimes, young leaves, mature leaves, roots, xylem, female catkins, and male catkins. The compendium of data derived from these experiments is referred to as the Populus Gene Expression (PopGenExpress) data set. As is commonly the case for genes encoding transcription factors, many of the P. trichocarpa R2R3-MYB-encoding genes had low transcript abundance levels, as determined by the Affymetrix microarray analysis. Nevertheless, distinct transcript abundance patterns were readily identifiable in the PopGenExpress data set for all 180 of the R2R3-MYB probe sets on the microarray. Groups of MYB-encoding genes showed preferential accumulation of transcripts in a given organ or tissue or under a specific condition (Fig. 4 ). In fact, the majority (75%) of Populus R2R3-MYB-encoding genes exhibited transcript abundance profiles that had marked peaks in transcript abundance in only one distinct condition in the current PopGenExpress data set. This suggests that R2R3-MYB proteins function as regulators of processes that are limited to discrete cells, organs, or conditions.
In keeping with their roles as regulators in plant-specific processes, 23 of 180 Populus R2R3-MYB-encoding genes showed the highest level of transcript abundance in differentiating xylem, a tissue that gives rise to the woody stem characteristic of trees like Populus. A further 29 R2R3-MYB genes (16%) had the greatest accumulation of transcripts in roots. Remarkably, none of these genes encoded a protein with high sequence similarity to WEREWOLF, which is involved in the determination of epidermal cell fate in Arabidopsis roots (Tominaga et al., 2007
Strikingly, seven of the Populus MYB family members with the most abundant expression in roots encode proteins in a clade with members of the Blind subfamily of R2R3-MYB proteins (C1). Blind was originally identified on the basis of its role in affecting plant aerial architecture by controlling axillary branch formation in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum; Schmitz et al., 2002 Approximately 28% (50 of 180) of the Populus R2R3-MYB-encoding genes had the highest transcript abundance in catkins. Twenty-nine of these 50 genes (58%) showed the highest transcript accumulation in male catkins, seven (14%) had the highest accumulation in female catkins, and the remaining 14 (28%) had approximately equal transcript accumulation in male and female catkins. The genes showing the highest transcript accumulation in both male and female catkins represent the largest group of R2R3-MYB transcripts that accumulate in more than one condition in this data set.
Twelve of the R2R2-MYB-encoding genes with the highest transcript accumulation in flowers fell into four clades (C11, C19, C38, and C39) that contained Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB family members with known roles in plant reproductive biology. These included Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB family members implicated in anther development (AtMBY21 [Shin et al., 2002 In addition to groups of genes that had similar transcript abundance profiles but were relatively phylogenetically distinct, several phylogenetic clades were characterized by having members that largely shared the same transcript abundance profile. Similar transcript abundance patterns were observed even between Arabidopsis and Populus members of the clade. Prominent among these clades were those that included R2R3-MYB-encoding genes related to those previously implicated in the regulation of phenylpropanoid metabolism.
Many R2R3-MYB proteins modulate the expression of genes encoding enzymes involved in various facets of phenylpropanoid metabolism. Phenylpropanoid metabolism generates a vast array of compounds that are important for a diversity of plant functions, including resistance to herbivore and pathogen attacks (Peters and Constabel, 2002
Many of the R2R3-MYB proteins implicated in the control of phenylpropanoid metabolism group into specific clades on the basis of the facet of phenylpropanoid metabolism they regulate. For example, clade 10 includes R2R3-MYB family members implicated in the regulation of genes encoding lignin biosynthetic enzymes (Fig. 5A
). This clade includes Pinus taeda MYB4, which is expressed in cells undergoing lignification and alters the accumulation of transcripts corresponding to genes encoding lignin biosynthetic enzymes (Patzlaff et al., 2003
In our phylogeny, two V. vinifera proteins and four P. trichocarpa proteins group in the lignification-related R2R3-MYB clade. The P. trichocarpa genes encoding these proteins are located on LG_1 (PtrMYB002 and PtrMYB003) and LG_IX (PtrMYB020 and PtrMYB021) in regions that are thought to be the paralogous product of the recent salicoid whole genome duplication event (Tuskan et al., 2006
R2R3-MYB proteins are also well known regulators of anthocyanin biosynthesis in fruit, flowers, and leaves. PRODUCTION OF ANTHOCYANIN PIGMENT (PAP) proteins, AtMYB75/PAP1 and AtMYB90/PAP2, are two of the best characterized Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB proteins involved in this process. AtMYB75/PAP1 is essential for both Suc-induced (Teng et al., 2005 The genes encoding the proteins in the clade implicated in the regulation of anthocyanin biosynthesis have a distinctive arrangement in the Arabidopsis, V. vinifera, and P. trichocarpa genomes. In all three organisms, the genes are present as tandem duplications that appear to have arisen since they last shared a common ancestor (Fig. 5C; Supplemental Fig. S1). Notably, the R3 MYB repeat in P. trichocarpa and V. vinifera R2R3-MYB proteins in this clade is modified relative to the corresponding motif in the Arabidopsis and P. hybrida proteins. This modification takes the form of a four-amino acid addition (QVk/qM) directly preceding the first conserved Trp in the R3 repeat (Supplemental Fig. S2A). These additional amino acids are encoded by sequences present at the 3' end of the second exon. Based on an alignment of the predicted mRNA molecules for the Arabidopsis, V. vinifera, and P. trichocarpa genes in this clade, it does not appear that there has been an error in splice site prediction (Supplemental Fig. S2B). That is, the additional amino acids in the Populus R3 domain appear to be bona fide components of the motif. Given the role of this motif in protein-DNA interactions, the additional four amino acids in the Populus proteins could affect DNA binding. The fact that this motif is present in all six of the Populus members of the clade suggests that they are likely to bind to similar targets, but it remains to be determined if their binding specificity or selectivity differs from that of their Arabidopsis counterparts. Future studies could examine this possibility and use it as the basis to explore the coevolution of DNA-binding domains relative to their cognate cis-acting DNA binding sites.
The high degree of redundancy within those clades in which genes share highly similar transcript abundance profiles is consistent with the hypothesis that subfunctionalization has occurred, with individual family members assuming nonredundant functions in the same tissue. In some cases, subfunctionalization may have resulted in one of the MYB proteins acting as an activator of gene expression and another acting as a repressor. Coexpression of such antagonistic pairs of MYB proteins can produce a "gearing mechanism" in which the regulation of shared target genes is a function of the relative abundance of a strong activator relative to a weaker one (Moyano et al., 1996
Identification of Populus R2R3-MYB genes with transcript abundance patterns or gene products that are phylogenetically close to MYB proteins with known function from other species provides candidates for future studies aimed at thoroughly dissecting MYB function. Such studies would benefit from tools that enabled more intuitive representations of transcript abundance patterns from the PopGenExpress compendium, so that rapid comparisons could be made with putative orthologs from better characterized species such as Arabidopsis. To enable community-wide, simple, graphical representation of PopGenExpress transcript abundance data, a Web-based tool was devised, the Populus Electronic Fluorescent Pictograph (eFP) browser (Fig. 6
; http://www.bar.utoronto.ca/efppop/cgi-bin/efpWeb.cgi). The Populus eFP browser is based on eFP tools for Arabidopsis and Mus musculus (Winter et al., 2007
The Arabidopsis eFP browser tool has already proven to be highly useful in the display and interpretation of Arabidopsis transcript abundance data. Use of the comparable tool for Populus (Fig. 6) will also enable straightforward, intuitive representation of Populus transcript abundance data as well as simple comparison of transcript abundance distribution for a given Populus gene against its putative Arabidopsis counterpart. Comparison of eFP browser profiles for homologous Arabidopsis and Populus genes facilitates direct testing of the hypothesis that the homologs may respond to the same stimuli or play a role in the same processes in their respective species. This simple analysis can be extended to any pair of potentially orthologous genes, across the entire set of genes probed by the Affymetrix array. To facilitate such hypothesis testing and development, all Arabidopsis and P. trichocarpa orthologs have been precomputed using the OrthoMCL algorithm and are displayed as links in the eFP browser.
Detailed annotation and phylogenetic analysis of the entire complement of P. trichocarpa R2R3-MYB genes and their protein products reveal the striking diversification that has occurred in this gene family in Populus. Some of this diversification is attributable to genome duplication, but unequal expansion in particular clades and the manifestation of entire clades lacking Arabidopsis family members suggest that some of the diversification in Populus R2R3-MYB family members may contribute to lineage-specific phenotypic innovations. Here, we have identified some of the family members that may contribute to these innovations, through an examination of both the R2R3-MYB phylogeny and patterns of transcript abundance. These genes will form the basis for future hypothesis tests involving gain-of-function and loss-of-function studies aimed at clarifying their roles in Populus growth, development, and survival. We also provide a collection of data and an associated bioinformatics tool that enable the research community to examine, visualize, and formulate hypotheses based on transcript abundance of R2R3-MYB-encoding genes or, indeed, any other gene in Populus that is represented on the Affymetrix Poplar GeneChip. By precomputing Arabidopsis-Populus orthologs, we also enable easy cross-species expression viewing to identify the true functional ortholog in Populus of a given Arabidopsis gene, if it exists. The gene expression database is expandable and will acquire greater value as other researchers add their GeneChip data to the core compendium we have established. This will add greatly to the expanding toolbox available to characterize the molecular mechanisms underpinning the basic biology of an ecologically dominant and economically important tree genus.
Plant Material Plant material was collected from clonally propagated, 8-week-old Populus balsamifera saplings (clone 1006; Alberta Pacific Forest Industries) grown in a climate-controlled growth chamber (mature leaf, young leaf, root, differentiating xylem), or from P. balsamifera seeds (etiolated light and dark seedlings; seed lot no. 20071015; National Tree Seed Centre), or from mature P. balsamifera trees grown by Alberta Pacific Forest Industries in a field trial in Grassland, Alberta, Canada (male and female catkins). Trees established in the growth chamber were grown in Sunshine Mix (Sun Gro Horticulture) with a 16-h photoperiod, a maximum daytime temperature of 22°C, and a minimum nighttime temperature of 17°C. All tissues were collected 8 h into the light phase during a 16-h/8-h light/dark cycle , except for the midnight samples, which were collected at 4 h after the shift from light to dark in the same cycle. All tissues were collected from saplings without water limitations. For the comparison of dark-grown seedlings versus those grown in the dark and then exposed to light for 3 h, seeds were germinated in the dark in a growth chamber on wetted filter paper on petri plates with a constant temperature of 21°C for 5 d. On the 6th d, half of the plates were exposed to light (150 µmol) for 3 h. At this time, seedlings were collected from plates exposed to light and from plates in continuous darkness. All collected plant materials were flash frozen in liquid nitrogen upon harvesting and stored at –80°C until RNA was extracted. Each sample comprised pooled material from three individuals, except for the seedling samples, which comprised pooled material from 20 individuals. Mature leaf samples comprised the first fully expanded leaf of three saplings, including the petiole. Young leaf samples included the first leaf, with its petiole, that was completely uncurled but was still shiny and much smaller than the mature leaves. Root samples included the distal 15 cm of well-rinsed root mass. Differentiating xylem was collected from the bottom 6 inches of the stem by peeling off the bark and immediately scraping the surface of the exposed wood into microcollection tubes containing liquid nitrogen. Seedlings were grown for 5 d in the dark; on the 6th d, half of the seedlings were transferred to the light and samples (comprising entire seedlings) were collected at 30 min after transfer to light. Male and female catkins were collected on April 30, 2007.
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) R2R3- and 3R-MYB gene identifiers were obtained from Stracke et al. (2001)
Gene identifiers for 94 Vitis vinifera R2R3-MYB genes were obtained from Matus et al. (2008) Populus trichocarpa MYB gene models were retrieved from the Joint Genome Institute P. trichocarpa version 1.1 Web site (http://genome.jgi-psf.org/Poptr1_1/Poptr1_1.home.html). Putative MYB genes in the P. trichocarpa genome were identified using the PAC version 0.1 Ortholog Finder using Arabidopsis R2R3-MYBs as reference (Supplemental Table S1). MYB gene models were identified using the KOG keyword "MYB." All P. trichocarpa and V. vinifera models were manually inspected to ensure that the putative gene models contained two or three MYB DBDs and that the gene models mapped to unique loci in their respective genomes. It is important to note that a proportion of the 21 P. trichocarpa R2R3-MYB genes that have not been assigned to a LG may be alleles of genes already placed on a LG, but as this has not yet been resolved empirically, these 21 genes were treated as distinct loci.
An additional 22 R2R3-MYB transcription factors from other tree species were included in the phylogeny: seven from Pinus taeda, 13 from Picea glauca, and two from Eucalyptus gunnii (Supplemental Table S5). A further 32 "landmark" MYB proteins from a variety of other organisms were also included in the analysis (Supplemental Table S6; Jiang et al., 2004
Phylogenetic analysis included the above 506 R2R3-MYB proteins and 15 3R-MYB proteins. The full-length amino acid sequences were aligned with MAFFT using the G-INS-I algorithm (Katoh et al., 2005
Plant material was ground to a fine powder under liquid nitrogen, and total RNA was extracted from each sample using the procedure described by Chang et al. (1993)
GeneChip data analysis was performed using the BioConductor suite (Gentleman et al., 2004
A Poplar eFP browser (http://www.bar.utoronto.ca/efppop/cgi-bin/efpWeb.cgi) was developed based on the Bio-Array Resource database framework described by Toufighi et al. (2005) Sequence data from this article can be found in the Joint Genome Institute's Populus trichocarpa v1.1 library (http://genome.jgi-psf.org/Poptr1_1/Poptr1_1.home.html), in Genoscope's Vitis vinifera Genome library (http://www.genoscope.cns.fr/spip/Vitis-vinifera-e.html), and in the GenBank data library (for all species other than P. trichocarpa and V. vinifera) under the accession numbers listed in Supplemental Tables S1, S3, S4, S5, and S6. Microarray data from this article can be found in the GEO database under accession number GSE13990.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We are most grateful to Dr. Levi Waldron and Ms. Than Nguyen for superb technical assistance, to Ms. Josephine McKeever for excellent renderings of plant organs, and to Dr. Barb Thomas and Mr. David Kamelchuk for generously providing Populus plant material. Populus seeds were generously provided by the Canadian National Tree Seed Centre. Received November 18, 2008; accepted December 12, 2008; published December 17, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the Centre for Analysis of Genome Evolution and Function at University of Toronto, by the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI; grants to N.J.P.), and by the University of Toronto, CFI, and NSERC (grants to M.M.C.). O.W. was generously supported by a NSERC Canadian Graduate Scholarship. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Malcolm M. Campbell (malcolm.campbell{at}utoronto.ca).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.132795 * Corresponding author; e-mail malcolm.campbell{at}utoronto.ca.
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